麻豆传媒

 

Not your average computer camp

- February 15, 2008

鈥淐alling all computer geeks. Your country鈥檚 economy needs you.鈥澛
鈥斅燭he Globe聽& Mail, January 21, 2008

Canada鈥檚 hightech sector is facing a significant skills shortage. While industry has rebounded from the dot-com bubble burst almost a decade ago, enrollment in computer science programs across the country has been slower to recover. A recent Conference Board study commissioned by a coalition of Canadian employers estimates there may be as many as 58,000 new jobs in the field in the next year alone, and the economy needs skilled workers to fill them.

鈥淭his is an unprecedented opportunity for computer science graduates,鈥 explains Denis Riordan, professor with 麻豆传媒鈥檚 Faculty of Computer Science. 鈥淭he students coming into school right now are going to come out at exactly the right time with extremely good job opportunities.鈥

That鈥檚 the message that Dr. Riordan and his colleagues in the Faculty of Computer Science are going to share with over 60 high school students this Saturday at their third annual Computer Science Day.

鈥淐omputer Science Day is a chance for high school students to have some fun and learn about studying computer science,鈥 continues Dr. Riordan, who organizes the open house event featuring workshops in writing computer games, learning new computing languages like Python and programming for the web. 鈥淭he workshops are all taught in a university-like environment, so that students can see exactly what it鈥檚 like taking computer science or informatics at 麻豆传媒.鈥

Many of the workshops will be taught by professors, staff and PhD students from the Faculty of Computer Science. The seminar in game design, one of the most popular, will be led by Chris Pink of HB Studios, a Nova Scotia-based video game developer.

Over a dozen of the students have also signed up for the Invitational Software Competition. They will present their own custom-made digital applications to a panel of experts for a chance to win a laptop and a scholarship to 麻豆传媒. The winners will be announced at the day鈥檚 closing ceremony.

For more information on Computer Science Day, visit


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